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A Clinical Trial of Extraperitonealization for Prevention of Parastomal Hernia After Ileal Conduit

Sun Yat-sen University logo

Sun Yat-sen University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Bladder Cancer

Treatments

Procedure: Modified ileal conduit

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03822234
B2018-104-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

Many complications may occur after ileal conduit, with the incidence increasing with time after surgery. Nearly half of the complications are related to stoma and ureteroileal anastomosis. The investigators believe that the surgical technique is responsible for these complications, and therefore have devised a modified technique for creating the ileal conduit that should help prevent these complications after surgery. The investigators' retrospective study shows that modified surgical technique for ileal conduit urinary diversion appears to be effective for reducing early and late complications related to the stoma. Thus the investigators would like to perform a prospective multicenter randomized controlled clinical study to prove the investigators' results.

The investigators plan to enroll 104 patients, and randomizedly divide the participants into two groups, with one group 52 patients undergoing conventional ileal conduit, another group 52 patients undergoing modified ileal conduit.

Full description

The ileal conduit (Bricker) has been used for urinary diversion for more than half a century. Widely accepted to be a simple and safe form of urinary diversion, it remains one of the most commonly used techniques for urinary diversion after radical cystectomy for bladder cancer. However, many complications may occur after ileal conduit, with the incidence increasing with time after surgery. Interestingly, nearly half of the complications are related to stoma and ureteroileal anastomosis. Among the complications, parastomal hernia is the most common. Female gender, low preoperative serum albumin level, high BMI or severe obesity, and prior laparotomy have been shown to be risk factors for parastomal hernia. But the mechanisms by which these variables lead to stoma related complications have not yet been fully elucidated. The investigators believe that the surgical technique is responsible for these complications, and therefore have devised a modified technique for creating the ileal conduit that should help prevent these complications after surgery. The investigators' retrospective study shows that modified surgical technique for ileal conduit urinary diversion appears to be effective for reducing early and late complications related to the stoma. Thus the investigators would like to perform a prospective multicenter randomized controlled clinical study to prove the investigators' results.

The investigators plan to enroll 104 patients, and randomizedly divide the participants into two groups, with one group 52 patients undergoing conventional ileal conduit, another group 52 patients undergoing modified ileal conduit.

Enrollment

104 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 18-75 years old, gender not limited, life expectancy is greater than or equal to 24 months;
  2. ECOG score of patients: 0-1;
  3. Volunteer to participate in this study and sign the informed consent;
  4. T2-T4a, N0-x,M0 invasive bladder cancer; High risk non-muscular invasive bladder cancer T1G3(high grade) tumor; Tis in which BCG therapy failed; Recurrent non-invasive bladder cancer; TUR and bladder perfusion were used for treatment of uncontrolled extensive papillary lesions and bladder non-urothelial carcinoma;
  5. Major organ functions, such as liver, kidney, bone marrow, heart and other important organs, were not significantly abnormal: AST, ALT≤2.5 upper limit of normal value (ULN); Total bilirubin (TBIL)≤1.5 ULN; Albumin (ALB)≥25g/L; Serum creatinine (CRE)≤1.5 ULN; Leukocytes≥3.5*109/L, neutrophils≥1.5*109/L, hemoglobin≥90g/L, platelets≥80*109/L; Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ≥50%; Electrocardiogram showed no obvious abnormality or no clinical significance.

Exclusion criteria

  1. A history of major middle and lower abdominal surgery;
  2. Obese patients (BMI≥40kg/m2);
  3. Failure to receive regular follow-up review as required;
  4. Severe cardiovascular disease;
  5. History of immunodeficiency and organ transplantation;
  6. History of severe central nervous system disease

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

104 participants in 2 patient groups

Modified ileal conduit
Experimental group
Description:
With our modified ileal conduit technique
Treatment:
Procedure: Modified ileal conduit
Conventional ileal conduit
No Intervention group
Description:
Conventional ileal conduit

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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